Danville Light, Power & Traction Co. v. Commonwealth

230 S.W. 38, 191 Ky. 270, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 302
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 22, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 230 S.W. 38 (Danville Light, Power & Traction Co. v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Danville Light, Power & Traction Co. v. Commonwealth, 230 S.W. 38, 191 Ky. 270, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 302 (Ky. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Turner, Commissioner

Reversing.

Appellant is a corporation which is required by section 4078, Ky. Stats., to file with the auditor, between the 30th of June and the first of October of each year, a verified statement or report showing certain facts which are [271]*271designed to enable the board of valuation and assessment to fix the value of its franchise for taxing purposes.

Section 4087', being part of the same act, provides:

“Any corporation, or officer thereof, willfully failing or refusing to make reports as required by this chapter, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and for each offense shall be fined one thousand dollars and fifty dollars for each day the same is’not made after October the first of each year.”

At the September term, 1918, of the Franklin circuit court appellant was indicted, charged with a willful failure to file the report provided for, and upon a plea of “not guilty,” the case was submitted to the court, a jury waived, and a judgment was entered for a fine of $1,400, of which $1,000 was for failure to file before the first of October, and $400 was for the failure to file it for eight days thereafter.

It is admitted that defendant failed to make the report until the 9th day of October, 1917, and in explanation of that failure defendant introduced only one' witness, Judge I. E. Kelsoe, whose statements are not contradicted.

Judge Kelsoe, we assume, from his testimony, was a legal representative of or connected with the legal department of the operating company — hereinafter referred to. He states that the defendant corporation is one of a large number of small utilities companies operated by the Light and Development Company of St. Louis, an operating company of that city; that the operating company engages as an engineering concern in the management and direction of light, gas, water, heating and refrigerating plants and systems, and does a general engineering management business; that it, as such, has operated appellant company at Danville since the year 1912, and furnishes to it the advantages of advice and assistance of its legal department and engineering department, and such financial advice and assistance and executive management as such operating companies usually do in the management and control of such utilities; that the utilities companies, including appellant, pay for this management, and that the compensation covers the service of the operating company’s several departments, including the bookkeeping and accounting department, and legal, financial and executive management of the local utilities concerns ; that under this arrangement it was- the duty of the operating [272]*272company to file the reports required by law to be filed by the local companies; that during the period involved the operating compaily managed such local companies in Ohio, Kentucky, Illinois, South Dakota, Oklahoma, Texas and Missouri, and the operating company was thereby compelled to file for the different local companies operated by it from 125 to 150 reports during each year; that the operating company kept a folder for each local company operated by it, in which it kept copies of each report filed for such company, and endorsed on the cover of the folder a memorandum showing the reports required to be made and the dates when they were due; that the operating company provided a legal department and an accounting department, with the necessary facilities for giving notice to the local concerns charged with the duty of preparing and filing such reports; that the operating-company required all local companies operated by it to report to the St. Louis office all notices received by the local companies, and that when the manager of any local company operated by the operating company received notice of a report to be made, it was required to promptly compile any information within the knowledge of its officials and transmit the same to the St. Louis office of the operating company, there to be completed; that upon receipt of such notices from the local concerns they were referred to the bookkeeping and accounting department of the operating company, and such reports were completed under the supervision of the legal department, and that it was the duty of the latter department to have a complete supervision of the reports and to see that they were in the proper form and made up and filed in time.

ITe states that the report in question,- due on or before October 1,1917, from appellant company, was marked off of his list of reports to be made as having been made prior to October 1, 1917; and that this was done because of information he had received from R. L. Carpenter, assistant secretary of the operating company that the report had been made; that Carpenter was actively in charge of the work of preparing such reports and personally required to report to the witness regarding same; that it was Carpenter’s business and duty to keep the witness advised and informed of such things, and that the information he received from him that the report had been made convinced him that it had been, and that acting upon such information he checked off the report as hav[273]*273ing been made prior to October 1, 1917, and'in good faith believed that the report had been so made, and continued to so believe until a few days after the first of October. 1917, when the auditor, Mr. Greene, notified the Danville office, and the manager there wired the,St. Louis office, that the report had not been received ;■ that he was still confident that the report had been sent in on time, but upon receiving such information the report was hastily prepared and filed about the 9th of October, just as soon as it could have been after being so advised; that he was so certain that the report had been filed prior to the first of October that he would have been willing to make an affidavit to that effect.

Upon cross-examination he stated that the local manager of the Danville company had furnished the information for the reports of that company before, and was familiar with the date upon which the report should be filed, and that he thought the report had been filed because Mr. Carpenter said so, but later found out that it had not been filed for the reason that the local manager at Danville had not sent to the office of the operating company the data to make up the report because, as complained by the local manager, he had not received from the auditor the blank on which to make the report.

This statute appears first to have been before this court for interpretation in the case of Louisville & Jeffersonville Ferry Co. v. Com., 104 Ky. 726, and the court, at page 736, in defining the word “willful” as used therein, said:

“The term ‘willful,’ as used in the statute, simply means the voluntary act of a party, as distinguished from coercion, or, in other words, that he was free to report or not to report; and the term ‘wilfully failing’ can, as we think, have no other rational construction. ’ ’

But in the same opinion, immediately after so defining the word “willful,” the court qualified that definition by the use of the following language:

“It may be that a party in fact believed that'the report had been forwarded to the proper officer, or in fact might have been sent, and by accident failed to reach its destination, in which event it would be a failure to report but would not be willful or intentional, for the reason that the party had in good faith attempted to comply with the statute.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
230 S.W. 38, 191 Ky. 270, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/danville-light-power-traction-co-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1921.